Chaos, Culture, And The Sound Of Dissent

MAR 7, 202647 MIN
The Fisch Bowl

Chaos, Culture, And The Sound Of Dissent

MAR 7, 202647 MIN

Description

Send a textEver hear a lyric that flips on the light in a dark room? Jack Horner of the UK psychedelic duo The Dirt joins us to unpack Monkey Punch, a live-wire album tracked in just two days that insists albums should feel like stories, not shuffled singles. We dive into the line that’s still ringing in our heads—“Protons neutrons controlled by morons”—and use it as a compass for a bigger conversation about unity over division, resisting performative outrage, and building spaces where disagreement can breathe without turning toxic.Jack pulls back the curtain on process: recording live without a drummer, trusting first takes, and partnering with producer Jason Shaw to preserve grit, air, and momentum. We talk about why some songs need six and a half minutes, why vinyl’s 42-minute canvas still shapes better narratives, and how algorithmic skimming flattens meaning. If you’ve ever missed the feeling of flipping a record, this one’s for you.Culture threads through every riff. We map the parallels between long-form music and slow cinema—think Blade Runner and the rare sequel that dared to stretch time—arguing that patience isn’t a luxury, it’s a creative weapon. From social media’s shrinking attention spans to the resilience of underground scenes in the UK, US, and Japan, we make the case for art that outlasts the scroll. Monkey Punch is protest you can hum, a reminder that chaos can clarify when it’s channeled with care.Hit play to hear how a minimalist setup carries maximal intent, why the underground still matters, and how storytelling structure can turn an album into a world. If this conversation moves you, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves long songs, and leave a quick review—your words help keep the signal strong.Support the show